BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention was made with Government support. The Government has certain rights
in this invention.
[0002] This invention relates to the measurement of the frequency of a signal, and, more
particularly, to a technique which functions very rapidly and with great accuracy.
[0003] It is often necessary to determine the frequency of an electrical signal. In the
best-known approach to frequency measurement, the number of zero-crossings of a periodic
signal occurring in a fixed sampling period of time is counted and converted to a
frequency value. The longer the sampling period, the greater the accuracy of the frequency
value. This technique works well if the available sampling period is longer than at
least several cycles of the periodic signal. In other circumstances, however, the
zero-crossing technique has shortcomings.
[0004] For example, frequency hopping signal synthesizers are used in a number of applications
such as frequency-hopping spread spectrum communications. In this approach, the output
frequency of the signal synthesizer whose signal carries information is varied rapidly
between preselected or randomly selected frequencies. The signal synthesizer must
accurately transmit at the desired frequency, and it is therefore important to be
able to measure whether the output signal of the signal synthesizer is actually at
the desired frequency or has drifted away.
[0005] In fast frequency hopping applications, the output signal does not dwell at any one
frequency for a sufficiently long period of time to utilize the zero-crossing technique
effectively to obtain real time, highly accurate measurements of the actual frequency
output value. Some available test equipment can record the output signal for a period
of time and download it for subsequent processing and analysis. This approach does
not give real time information and, in addition, signal recording is suspended during
the downloading period.
[0006] There is a need for an improved technique for accurately finding the frequency of
a signal in real time and with a very short observation time. The present invention
fulfills this need, and further provides related advantages.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0007] The present invention provides a technique for finding the frequency of a signal
in real time, with high accuracy. The required observation time to determine the frequency
is quite short. Signal frequency determination is continuous, with no gaps in the
data.
[0008] In accordance with the invention, a method for finding the frequency of a signal
comprises providing a signal filter having, as a function of frequency, a signal pass
band frequency range wherein a high fraction of an initial amplitude of an introduced
signal passes through the signal filter, a signal stop band frequency range wherein
a low fraction of an initial amplitude of an introduced signal passes through the
signal filter, and a signal filter skirt band frequency range between the signal pass
band and the signal stop band, wherein an intermediate inaction of an initial amplitude
of an introduced signal passes through the signal filter. In the signal filter skirt
band frequency range, the intermediate fraction varies with the frequency of the introduced
signal.
[0009] A test applied signal is introduced into the signal filter. The test applied signal
has a frequency which lies within the signal filter skirt band frequency range. If
an initial test signal has a frequency which is not within the signal filter skirt
band frequency range, it may be converted to that required frequency rage by known
up-converting or down-converting techniques. The transmitted amplitude of the test
applied signal is measured after the test applied signal has passed through the signal
filter, and is utilized as a measure of the frequency of the test applied signal.
The transmitted amplitude may be used directly, or converted to a frequency value
using a calibration of the filter that relates the transmitted amplitude of the signal
applied to the signal filter to the frequency of the signal.
[0010] The present approach requires only a very short sampling or observation time of the
signal to make accurate measurements of the frequency of the signal. Determinations
of frequencies in the gigahertz range to within about ±50 Hertz, made in a measurement
period of 50 microseconds, have been demonstrated. By comparison, available commercial
test equipment achieves accuracies of about ±5000 Hertz in the same 50 microsecond
sampling period. The present approach achieves two orders of magnitude improvement
in accuracy of the measurement.
[0011] Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the
following more detailed description of the preferred embodiment, taken in conjunction
with the accompanying drawings, which illustrate, by way of example, the principles
of the invention. The scope of the invention is not, however, limited to this preferred
embodiment.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0012]
Figure 1 is a block flow diagram of a preferred approach for practicing the invention;
Figure 2 is a block diagram of a first apparatus for practicing the present invention;
Figures 3A-3D are graphs of filter response properties;
Figure 4 is a schematic calibration diagram used in the invention;
Figure 5 is a block diagram of a second apparatus for practicing the present invention;
Figure 6 is a block diagram of a third apparatus for practicing the present invention;
Figure 7 is a block diagram of a switched filter bank; and
Figure 8 is a block flow diagram of a preferred approach for differential frequency
measurements using the present invention.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0013] Figure 1 illustrates a preferred approach for practicing the invention, and Figure
2 depicts the functional structure of a apparatus 40 used in this approach. A signal
filter 42 is provided, numeral 20. The signal filter 42 is a known type of device
which normally includes inductors and capacitors configured to pass a selected band
of frequencies and block another band of frequencies. That is, the signal filter 42
has a characteristic wherein the amplitude of the passed signal is a function of the
input frequency of the signal. Figures 3A-3D illustrate the transmitted relative amplitude
(normalized to an input amplitude of 1) versus frequency characteristics of the four
most common types of signal filters. In each case, there is a signal band pass range
wherein a high fraction of an initial amplitude of an introduced signal passes through
the signal filter, a signal stop band frequency range wherein a low fraction of an
initial amplitude of an introduced signal passes through the signal filter, ad a signal
filter "skirt" (the term of art) band frequency range between the signal pass band
and the signal stop band, wherein an intermediate fraction of an initial amplitude
of a introduced signal passes through the signal filter. These regions are marked
for the case of a band pass filter (Figure 3A), a low pass filter (Figure 3B), a high
pass filter (Figure 3C), and a band reject filter (Figure 3D). Although the specific
frequency ranges and curve shapes may be varied according to design principles known
in the art of signal filter design, the important feature relative to the present
invention of all of these signal filters is that they each exhibit the signal filter
skirt band frequency range wherein the intermediate fraction of the initial amplitude
varies with the frequency of the introduced signal.
[0014] The filter 42 is initially calibrated to determine the transmitted amplitude versus
frequency curve within the signal filter skirt bad frequency range, or at least a
part thereof, with great accuracy, numeral 22. The calibration is essentially a highly
accurate plot of the amplitude versus frequency curve, as shown in an example in Figure
4. Preferably and as shown in Figure 4, the curve is linear in all of the utilized
portion of the skirt band frequency range, but the invention is operable even in the
absence of linearity. The calibration curve is obtained by passing a succession of
pure signals of different frequencies and of amplitudes A
O through the filter, and measuring the resulting succession of transmitted amplitudes
A
T. The resulting calibration relation, preferably presented as a normalized A
T/A
O as a function of frequency f, may be expressed graphically, as a formula, or as a
series of digitally stored points, but for convenience is termed a "calibration curve".
The calibration curve may be obtained with great accuracy, because each data point
is obtained with a pure input signal ad a long sampling period to achieve high accuracy
in the frequency data. The zero-crossing technique may be used to obtain the frequency
value in each case during this calibration step. The calibration information is provided
to step 32, to be discussed subsequently.
[0015] A test applied signal is provided, numeral 24, from a signal source 44. In the case
of most interest to the inventor, the signal source 44 is a high-rate frequency hopping
synthesizer operating in the gigahertz range (more than about 1 gigahertz but less
than about 1000 gigahertz) for frequency hopping spread spectrum data communications.
This frequency hopping signal source requires that highly accurate measurements of
the frequency of the output signal be made in very short periods of time, such as
about 50 microseconds in the case of a high-performance frequency hopping synthesizer
operating in the gigahertz range.
[0016] The initial amplitude A
O of the signal is determined, either by measurement or by assumption. Preferably,
A
O is measured by any operable apparatus 46, such as a Hewlett Packard 5347A Microwave
Counter and Power Meter. If the test applied signal of the signal source 44 is of
a known, highly accurate amplitude, that amplitude may be used as A
O.
[0017] The test applied signal is passed through the filter 42, numeral 28. Its transmitted
amplitude A
T is measured, numeral 30, preferably by the same type of apparatus 48 as used for
the apparatus 46.
[0018] As part of the measurement of the transmitted amplitude, the normalized amplitude
transmitted amplitude A
T/A
O is usually obtained using a signal divider 50 with the values of A
T and A
O. All further analysis is performed with this normalized information in order to avoid
effects of changes in amplitude of the test applied signal.
[0019] Because the test applied signal lies within the signal filter skirt band frequency
range, its associated frequency is as indicated on the calibration curve of Figure
4. Because this unique relationship is known to exist, the normalized transmitted
amplitude, A
T/A
O, may be used directly as a indicator of frequency. If the exact frequency value is
required, it is found using the calibration relationship of Figure 4, numeral 32.
The calibration relation for the signal filter 42 is provided to step 32 from the
calibration determination of step 22, which normally is performed at a different time
than the frequency determination of the test applied signal.
[0020] Thus, by carefully selecting a particular filter 42 such that the frequency of the
test applied signal lies within the signal filter skirt band frequency range of the
filter 42 (or may be converted to lie within that range), the transmitted (normalized)
amplitude of the filter is a direct measure of the frequency of the test applied signal.
[0021] The approximate frequency of the test applied signal is usually known
a priori, and the present approach is used to determine that frequency exactly. If the approximate
frequency is within the range of the skirt bad, as illustrated in Figure 4, it may
be used directly. If, however, it is outside of the range of the skirt band, it may
be upconverted or downconverted, numeral 26, so that the converted frequency lies
within the range of the skirt band. Highly accurate upconversion and downconversion
techniques and apparatus are known in the art.
[0022] Figures 5 and 6 illustrate two embodiments of apparatus for performing the frequency
measurements according to the present approach, each including a frequency conversion
capability. An initial signal in each case is provided from the source 44. It is mixed
by a frequency mixer 60 with a synthesized frequency from a pure, steady mixing frequency
source 62, to produce a test applied signal that is within the filter skirt bad of
the selected signal filter 42. The mixed signal is passed through the signal filter
42. In the case of the apparatus of Figure 5, the filtered signal is introduced directly
into an amplitude detector 64 of any operable type. In the case of the apparatus of
Figure 6, the filtered signal is de-mixed by a frequency demixer 66 operating with
the same synthesized frequency as the frequency mixer 60, and which was split from
the signal to the frequency mixer 60 by a power splitter 68. This mixing/demixing
technique is termed a Wadley Loop Filter. The difference in result between the approaches
of Figures 5 and 6 is that the detector 64 in Figure 5 operates on the mixed signal
having a frequency within the filter skirt band, ad the detector 64 in Figure 6 operates
on the signal having the original frequency of the mixing frequency source 62. The
resulting amplitude information is used in the manner discussed previously, and may
be conveniently depicted on an oscilloscope 70.
[0023] An alternative approach to handling a wide range of possible frequencies of the test
applied signal is illustrated in Figure 7. A number of filters 42, illustrated as
four filters 42a-42d, collectively having their signal filter skirt band frequency
ranges covering a wide range of frequencies, may be provided and the inputs and outputs
switched between them by respective switches 72 and 74. This filter bank would be
positioned at the location of element 42 in Figures 2, 5, or 6, with the upstream
and downstream elements unchanged. The filter bank may be used with the unmixed signal
approach of Figure 2, or with the mixed frequency approach of Figures 5-6.
[0024] The present approach is particularly effective when used to accurately measure the
difference in frequency between two signals, each of which has a frequency lying within
the signal filter skirt band. In this approach, a first test applied signal and a
second test applied signal are sequentially introduced into the signal filter. The
difference in amplitude between the two test applied signals is measured as an indicator
of the frequency difference between the first test applied signal and the second test
applied signal. If the frequency of one of the two signals is a reference value that
is known with great accuracy, as where it is produced by a highly stable synthesizer,
the frequency of the other test applied signal may also be determined with great accuracy
using this approach.
[0025] Figure 8 illustrates the method for such a determination, using substantially the
same apparatus as in Figures 2, 5, or 6, but with the addition of a high-speed switch
and a memory. In Figure 8, many of the same elements described above in relation to
Figure 1 are used and the same numerical identifiers applied, and those descriptions
are incorporated here. The differences in the two approaches are described next.
[0026] In the differential frequency method of Figure 8, a first test applied signal and
a second test applied signal are successively passed through the filter using a high
speed switch 27. The normalized transmitted amplitude of the first test applied signal,
A
T1/A
O1, is determined ad stored in a memory 31. The normalized amplitude of the second test
applied signal, A
T2/A
O2, is thereafter determined following operation of the switch 27. The frequency difference
determination, numeral 32, operates using the difference in these normalized amplitudes,
(A
T2/A
O2) - (A
T1/A
O1) to determine the difference in frequencies (f
2-f
1) as pictured in Figure 4.
[0027] The difference in frequencies (f
2-f
1) may be useful for many applications, where exact values of f
2 and f
1 are not known and need not be known. The exact value of a first one of these frequencies
may be determined if the other is known accurately, as, for example, where the second
one is a known reference frequency from a highly accurate reference source. For example,
if f
2 is such a reference frequency and f
1 is the output of the variable frequency source such as the previously discussed high-rate
frequency-hopping synthesizer, this difference method allows the highly accurate determination
of the numerical value of the frequency of the output of the frequency hopping synthesizer.
This determination is facilitated where the calibration curve of Figure 4 is linear,
because the frequency difference is a linear function of the normalized amplitude
difference. Some nonlinear calibration curves may also be used. The present approach
may be utilized with any monotonically increasing or decreasing segment of such a
nonlinear calibration curve
[0028] An apparatus like that of Figure 5 was assembled to determine frequencies of output
signals from a frequency hopping synthesizer operating in the 12.5-13.5 gigahertz
frequency range, with each dwell between hops being about 50 microseconds in duration.
A Hewlett Packard spectrum analyzer was used to tune the mixing frequency source 62
to the correct value so that the signal reaching the filter 42 would lie within the
skirt frequency rage. A 10 KHz wide Gaussian bandpass signal filter 42 was used ad
calibrated in the manner described. The measured amplitudes made in 50 microseconds
resulted in determinations of frequencies to within about ±50 Hertz. By comparison,
a commercially available, state-of-the-art Hewlett Packard 5345A frequency counter
produced accuracies of about ±5000 Hertz in the same 50 microsecond sampling period.
The present approach thus achieves two orders of magnitude improvement in accuracy
of the measurement, as compared with the commercially available instrument.
[0029] Although a particular embodiment of the invention has been described in detail for
purposes of illustration, various modifications ad enhancements may be made without
departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is
not to be limited except as by the appended claims.
1. A method for finding the frequency of a signal, the method comprising the steps of
providing a signal filter (42) having, as a function of frequency,
a signal pass band frequency range wherein a high fraction of an initial amplitude
of an introduced signal passes through the signal filter,
a signal stop band frequency range wherein a low fraction of an initial amplitude
of an introduced signal passes through the signal filter, and
a signal filter skirt band frequency range between the signal pass band and the signal
stop band, wherein an intermediate fraction of an initial amplitude of an introduced
signal passes through the signal filter, the intermediate fraction varying with the
frequency of the introduced signal;
introducing a test applied signal into the signal filter, the test applied signal
having a frequency which lies within the signal filter skirt band frequency range;
measuring the transmitted amplitude of the test applied signal after the test applied
signal has passed through the signal filter; and
utilizing the transmitted amplitude as an indicator of the frequency of the test applied
signal.
2. The method of claim 1, characterized in that the step of utilizing includes the steps
of
establishing a signal filter calibration relation of the amplitude of a transmitted
signal in the signal filter skirt band as a function of the frequency of an applied
signal; and
determining the frequency of the test applied signal from the transmitted amplitude
of the test signal and the signal filter calibration relation.
3. The method of claim 2, characterized in that the step of establishing a signal filter
calibration relation includes the step of
establishing the slope of the amplitude versus frequency relationship of the signal
filter.
4. The method of any of claims 1 to 3, characterized in that the step of introducing
a test applied signal includes the step of
providing a frequency hopping signal synthesizer, and
introducing signals from the frequency hopping signal synthesizer into the signal
filter.
5. The method of any of claims 1 to 4, characterized by the additional steps of
introducing a reference applied signal into the signal filter (42);
measuring the transmitted amplitude of the reference applied signal after the reference
applied signal has passed through the signal filter; and
comparing the transmitted amplitude of the test applied signal with the transmitted
amplitude of the reference applied signal as an indicator of the frequency difference
between the test applied signal and the reference applied signal.
6. The method of any of claims 1 to 5, characterized in that the step of introducing
a test applied signal includes the step of
providing a test initial signal whose frequency is not within the signal filter skirt
band, and
processing the test initial signal with a known frequency shift so that the resulting
signal is the test applied signal within the signal filter skirt band.
7. The method of any of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the signal filter (42) is
a band-pass filter.
8. The method of any of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the signal filter (42) is
a low pass filter.
9. The method of any of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the signal filter (42) is
a high pass filter.
10. The method of any of claims 1 to 6, characterized in that the signal filter (42) is
a band reject filter.
11. The method of any of claims 1 to 10, characterized in that the test applied signal
has a frequency of more than about 1 gigahertz and less than about 1000 gigahertz.